Article

Significant sectoral variations in levels of shift work

Published: 26 August 2007

The National Institute of Statistics (Institutul Naţional de Statistică, INS [1]) conducts a household labour force survey (/Ancheta forţei de muncă în gospodării/, AMIGO) on a quarterly basis entitled /Labour force in Romania: Employment and unemployment/ (/Forţa de muncă în România. Ocupare şi şomaj/). Since 2002, the survey questionnaire has been redesigned to conform to Eurostat [2] requirements for data sources. The face-to-face interview survey sample includes more than 28,000 households and the margin of error is 3%. The extended annual data are based on the mathematical average of the quarterly data.[1] http://www.insse.ro/[2] http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat

Household labour force survey data indicate that, in 2005, 24.1% of employees in Romania worked in shifts, compared with 26.1% in 2002. Men account for 54% of the total; however, large gender gaps arise in certain economic sectors. In terms of location, more than 75% of shift work is carried out in urban areas. The sectors where shift work is most prevalent are the extraction industry, hotels and restaurants, and health and social work.

About the survey

The National Institute of Statistics (Institutul Naţional de Statistică, INS) conducts a household labour force survey (Ancheta forţei de muncă în gospodării, AMIGO) on a quarterly basis entitled Labour force in Romania: Employment and unemployment (Forţa de muncă în România. Ocupare şi şomaj). Since 2002, the survey questionnaire has been redesigned to conform to Eurostat requirements for data sources. The face-to-face interview survey sample includes more than 28,000 households and the margin of error is 3%. The extended annual data are based on the mathematical average of the quarterly data.

Incidence of shift work

In 2005, more than 1.42 million employees performed shift work in Romania, compared with over 1.48 million employees in 2002, according to the AMIGO data. The total for 2005 represents 24.1% of all employees in Romania, while the 2002 figure represented 26.1%.

Of the total number of people working in shifts, men accounted for 54% in 2005 and 54.4% in 2002. People working in shifts mostly live in urban areas: in 2005, 75.6% of employees doing shift work lived in towns and cities, up from 72.7% in 2002. The remaining 24.4% of the workforce lived in rural areas in 2005 (as against 27.3% in 2002) (see Table 1).

Table 1: Employees working in shifts, by sex and area of residence, 2002 and 2005
Between 2002 and 2005, the number of people working in shifts in Romania declined from 1,486,900 to 1,425,000 persons. However, a relative increase was recorded in the proportion of employees doing shift work in urban areas.
  2002 2005
Total (in 000s), of which: 1,486.9 1,425.0
male 54.4% 54.0%
female 45.6% 46.0%
urban 72.7% 75.6%
rural 27.3% 24.4%

Source: AMIGO, INS, Bucharest, 2003 and 2006

Sectoral variations

While the total number of employees working in shifts declined in 2005 compared with 2002, in some sectors more people took on shift work – in the wholesale and retail trade, hotels and restaurants, real estate, and healthcare. The numbers remained practically the same in electricity, gas and water supply, and in construction, while they declined in manufacturing, the extractive industries, education, agriculture, public administration and transport (Table 2).

Table 2: Employees working in shifts, by sector, 2002 and 2005
Between 2002 and 2005, the number of people doing shift work in Romania declined from 26.1% to 24.1%. Such work is most common in the extractive industries, hotels and restaurants, and health and social work, while it is least prevalent in construction, education and agriculture.
  2002 2005
Number (in 000s) % of total employees Number (in 000s) % of total employees
Extraction industry 77.2 53.9 57.4 48.5
Hotels and restaurants 45.6 44.5 65.1 46.6
Health and social work 140.0 40.9 149.0 43.2
Transport, storage and communication 143.2 34.4 139.7 33.6
Manufacturing 661.2 34.7 551.2 29.0
Electricity, gas and water supply 53.4 27.5 53.8 28.3
National economy 1,486.9 26.1 1,425.0 24.1
Real estate, renting and business activities 29.1 23.8 50.7 23.7
Wholesale and retail trade 145.7 20.5 185.2 23.3
Public administration and defence 86.0 15.8 79.6 15.3
Other economic activities 38.2 15.3 38.5 13.4
Agriculture, hunting and forestry 20.2 10.3 14.5 8.3
Education 28.7 7.0 21.8 5.3
Construction 18.4 5.1 18.5 4.6

Source: INS, 2003 and 2006

Over-representation of sexes in certain sectors

In 2005, in the national economy, women represented on average 46% of the total number of shiftworkers. However, in the hotels and restaurants sector, they accounted for 98.9%, while they represented 93.7% in wholesale and retail trade, and 87.4% in health and social work (Table 3).

Table 3: Female shiftworkers as proportion of total, by sector, 2002 and 2005 (%)
Women account for the highest percentage of workers in shifts in the following sectors: hotels and restaurants; wholesale and retail trade; and health and social work. Men account for the majority of shiftworkers in: public administration and defence; electricity, gas and water supply; and transport, storage and communication.
  2002 2005
Hotels and restaurants 69.3 98.9
Wholesale and retail trade 73.7 93.7
Health and social work 82.1 87.4
All sectors 46.0 44.0
Education 55.0 41.8
Manufacturing 48.1 40.1
Transport, storage and communication 18.3 17.8
Electricity, gas and water supply 13.6 13.7
Public administration and defence 9.5 8.8

Source: INS, 2003 and 2006

Conversely, a lower proportion of women do shift work in the following sectors: public administration and defence (8.8%); electricity, gas and water supply (13.7%); and transport, storage and communication (17.8%). Meanwhile, in agriculture and the extractive industries, virtually no women work in shifts.

Further information

The survey is only available in Romanian and as a printed edition. More information is available on the high incidence of non-standard working hours in Romania (RO0704049I).

Luminiţa Chivu, Institute of National Economy

Eurofound recommends citing this publication in the following way.

Eurofound (2007), Significant sectoral variations in levels of shift work, article.

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